Restaurant in London, United Kingdom
Plaquemine Lock
350ptsMichelin Creole cooking at pub prices.

About Plaquemine Lock
Plaquemine Lock is a Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised Creole and Cajun pub in Islington, awarded back-to-back in 2024 and 2025. At a ££ price point, it delivers gumbo, blackened chicken, and crawfish alongside Big Easy-style cocktails that stand on their own. Google rates it 4.4 across 1,100+ reviews. Easy to book; walk-ins viable at the bar.
Should You Book Plaquemine Lock?
If you have been once, you already know the answer: yes, go back. The second visit to Plaquemine Lock, the Creole and Cajun pub on Graham Street in Islington, tends to land harder than the first. You arrive knowing what you want from the menu, you know roughly where to sit, and you know the cocktails are better than any pub on the street has a right to serve. What you might not have clocked first time is how the drinks programme holds its own as a destination in itself, not just a companion to the food. That is worth returning for specifically.
Plaquemine Lock holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for both 2024 and 2025, which is the clearest available signal that the quality-to-price relationship here is genuine. At a ££ price point, that recognition is meaningful: the Bib Gourmand is awarded to venues offering good cooking at moderate prices, and back-to-back years of recognition tells you this is not a one-season story. The pub is named after a small city in Louisiana, and the menu centres on Creole and Cajun traditions: gumbo with okra, blackened chicken, crawfish with corn and potatoes. These are dishes that require patience and layering to get right, and the kitchen under Tom Clements takes that seriously. Google reviewers back this up with a 4.4 rating across more than 1,100 reviews, which is a credible signal at that volume.
The Drinks Programme
The cocktail list here is built around Big Easy style: long, punchy, often spirit-forward drinks that reference New Orleans bar culture rather than the restrained, technique-heavy school of contemporary London cocktail bars. If you come in expecting the precision of an Attaboy-style operation, you will be surprised in a different direction. These drinks are about generosity and flavour impact, and they are priced in line with the pub's overall positioning. That makes this one of the more interesting value propositions on the bar side in Islington: you are getting a drinks programme with a genuine regional point of view, served in a colourful, high-energy room, at pub-tier prices. For anyone exploring what London's neighbourhood drinking scene offers beyond craft lager and natural wine, Plaquemine Lock is worth a specific visit for the bar alone. It sits closer in spirit to the drinking culture of Commander's Palace or Brennan's Restaurant in New Orleans than to anything else currently operating in north London.
Booking and Timing
Booking here is rated easy, which reflects the pub's format: this is not a timed-seating tasting menu operation. That said, the Bib Gourmand recognition and the strong Google rating mean the room fills, particularly on weekend evenings. If you are planning a Friday or Saturday dinner, booking a week or two ahead is sensible rather than essential. Midweek visits are more forgiving. Walk-in space at the bar is the fallback for spontaneous visits, and given that the cocktail programme is worth the trip independently, arriving without a reservation and eating at the bar is a legitimate strategy. The address is 139 Graham Street, London N1 8LB, in Islington, accessible from Angel or Old Street.
What the Room Is
The venue is a pub, and a deliberately colourful one. The design references Louisiana directly rather than trading in generic Americana, and the atmosphere is lively rather than quiet. This is not a room for a hushed dinner conversation, but it is a strong choice for a group that wants energy, food with actual flavour depth, and drinks that match the occasion. The Creole kitchen produces dishes that carry real aromatic weight: the kind of cooking where the smell of a well-built gumbo or a blackened protein reaches the table before the plate does. That sensory immediacy is part of what the room offers, and it is consistent with the pub's positioning as a place that takes its culinary reference point seriously.
Peer Context
For a food-focused visitor comparing options across London, it is worth being clear about what Plaquemine Lock is competing against. The ££££ end of the London restaurant market includes CORE by Clare Smyth, The Ledbury, and Dinner by Heston Blumenthal. Plaquemine Lock is not playing in that category, and it does not need to be. What it offers is Michelin-recognised cooking at a fraction of those price points, in a format that is more fun and more accessible. If you are visiting London from outside the city and want to spread your restaurant budget across a mix of price tiers, Plaquemine Lock is the kind of venue that earns its place in that itinerary alongside higher-spend options. For a fuller picture of where it sits in the city's dining options, see our full London restaurants guide.
Who Should Book
Book Plaquemine Lock if you want Michelin-recognised Creole cooking at pub prices, a cocktail list with a genuine regional identity, and a room with energy rather than formality. It is a strong pick for groups of two to four who want flavour-forward food without the ceremony of a tasting menu. It is less suited to anyone looking for a quiet dinner or a long, slow meal. For Creole cuisine in London, there is no direct equivalent operating at this price point with this level of recognition. That is the clearest case for booking.
Quick reference: Creole pub, Islington, ££, Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 and 2025, Google 4.4/5 (1,141 reviews), easy to book, walk-ins viable at the bar.
Explore More
Compare Plaquemine Lock
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plaquemine Lock | ££ | Easy | — |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| The Ledbury | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | ££££ | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Plaquemine Lock and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to Plaquemine Lock?
Come as you are. Plaquemine Lock is a pub, deliberately and without apology, so jeans and a t-shirt are entirely appropriate. The Bib Gourmand recognition is for the food, not the formality — there is no dress code to navigate here.
Can I eat at the bar at Plaquemine Lock?
Yes, and for solo diners or pairs, the bar is often the best seat in the house. The pub format means there is no strict table-only policy, and eating at the bar fits naturally with the Big Easy cocktail programme running alongside the food.
Does Plaquemine Lock handle dietary restrictions?
The menu centres on Creole and Cajun traditions — gumbo with okra, crawfish with corn and potatoes, blackened chicken — so meat and seafood are structural to most dishes. Diners with strict vegetarian, vegan, or shellfish-free requirements should check the venue's official channels before booking, as the cuisine is not naturally accommodating in those areas.
Is Plaquemine Lock good for a special occasion?
It depends on what you mean by special. For a birthday dinner where you want Michelin-recognised cooking without a £150-per-head bill, yes, it works well. For a formal anniversary where the room and ritual are part of the occasion, the pub setting will feel too casual — look at something like The Ledbury instead.
What are alternatives to Plaquemine Lock in London?
Within the Bib Gourmand tier, Plaquemine Lock has almost no direct competition for Louisiana-style cooking in London — the category is thin. If you want a different regional American food focus at similar prices, that search gets difficult quickly. For pure value-to-quality ratio in a casual format, it sits comfortably among the better pub dining options in Islington.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Plaquemine Lock?
Plaquemine Lock does not operate a tasting menu — it is a pub, and the format is à la carte. If a structured multi-course progression is what you are after, this is not the right venue. The value case here is ordering across the menu: gumbo, a main, and a Big Easy cocktail rather than any curated set sequence.
Is Plaquemine Lock worth the price?
At ££ pricing with back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025, yes — it is one of the clearer value cases in London right now. The Bib Gourmand is specifically awarded for good cooking at moderate prices, so the credential directly answers this question. You are not paying for a fine-dining room; you are paying for carefully cooked Creole food in a pub, and that trade-off is very favourable.
Recognized By
More restaurants in London
- CORE by Clare SmythClare Smyth's three-Michelin-star Notting Hill restaurant is one of London's most credentialled tables, holding La Liste 98pts, World's 50 Best #97, and a 4.7 Google rating across 1,460 reviews. The à la carte runs £195 per head; the Core Classic tasting menu is £255. Book Thursday or Friday lunch for the best chance of a table — dinner is near-impossible without 6–8 weeks' lead time.
- IkoyiTwo Michelin stars, No. 15 on the World's 50 Best in 2025, and a dinner tasting menu at £350 per head before wine: Ikoyi is one of London's hardest bookings and one of its most credentialed. Jeremy Chan's West African spice-led cooking applied to British organic produce is genuinely unlike anything else in the city. The express lunch at £150 is the entry point if the dinner price is the obstacle.
- KOLKOL ranked #17 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2024 and holds a Michelin star — the most compelling case for a progressive Mexican tasting menu in London. Booking opens two months out and sells out almost immediately, so treat it like a ticket release. If the dining room is full, the downstairs Mezcaleria offers serious agave spirits and kitchen-quality small plates as a genuine alternative.
- The Clove ClubHoused in the former Shoreditch Town Hall, The Clove Club holds two Michelin stars and has appeared in the World's 50 Best Restaurants list consistently since 2016. Isaac McHale's tasting menus draw on prime British ingredients — Orkney scallops, Herdwick lamb, Torbay prawns — handled with technical precision and a looseness that keeps the cooking from feeling ceremonial.
- The LedburyThe Ledbury holds three Michelin stars and the #1 Star Wine List ranking in the UK — making it the strongest combined food-and-wine destination in London at the ££££ tier. At £285 per head for the eight-course evening menu, it rewards occasions where both the kitchen and the cellar need to perform. Book months ahead: availability is near impossible, especially at weekends.
- Hélène Darroze at The ConnaughtThree Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 95 points make Hélène Darroze at The Connaught one of London's clearest cases for fine dining at the top price tier. The tasting menu builds intelligently across courses, the redesigned room is warm rather than stiff, and the service is precise without being suffocating. Book months ahead — midweek lunch is your most realistic entry point.
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